The Band

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The Band album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 71:35

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This is the big bang of southern rock

banomassa

The first and quite possibly still the best. People always cite The Allman Brothers, or Skynyrd or whoever for putting southern rock on the map but The Band made the map with this record. I mean sweet mother of god this record has The NIght They Drove Old Dixie Down on it. That alone makes the argument. But you also have Up on Cripple Creek, and that is the beginning for modern key sounds and using a wah with a rhoads or clav without this no 70's Stevie Wonder or 70's funk. No Tell Me something Good. It's like the musical bible! One of the best drums sounds too, so warm. So this really needs to be like the bible where most everyone has a copy. Download now.

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They Say All Music Guide

The Band’s first album, Music from Big Pink, seemed to come out of nowhere, with its ramshackle musical blend and songs of rural tragedy. The Band, the group’s second album, was a more deliberate and even more accomplished effort, partially because the players had become a more cohesive unit, and partially because guitarist Robbie Robertson had taken over the songwriting, writing or co-writing all 12 songs. Though a Canadian, Robertson focused on a series of American archetypes from the union worker in “King Harvest (Has Surely Come)” and the retired sailor in “Rockin’ Chair” to, most famously, the Confederate Civil War observer Virgil Cane in “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” The album effectively mixed the kind of mournful songs that had dominated Music from Big Pink, here including “Whispering Pines” and “When You Awake” (both co-written by Richard Manuel), with rollicking uptempo numbers like “Rag Mama Rag” and “Up on Cripple Creek” (both sung by Levon Helm and released as singles, with “Up on Cripple Creek” making the Top 40). As had been true of the first album, it was the Band’s sound that stood out the most, from Helm’s (and occasionally Manuel’s) propulsive drumming to Robertson’s distinctive guitar fills and the endlessly inventive keyboard textures of Garth Hudson, all topped by the rough, expressive singing of Manuel, Helm, and Rick Danko that mixed leads with harmonies. The arrangements were simultaneously loose and assured, giving the songs a timeless appeal, while the lyrics continued to paint portraits of 19th century rural life (especially Southern life, as references to Tennessee and Virginia made clear), its sometimes less savory aspects treated with warmth and humor. – William Ruhlmann

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